The Exorcist SummaryWilliam Peter Blatty

The Exorcist Summary

The central and overt themes in The Exorcist are metaphysical: What is the nature of man? How does one explain the existence of evil, and can that be reconciled with the existence of a benign God? Even the epigraphs of the three sections of the novel show a movement from the problem of evil, both supernatural and human, to an affirmation of faith and love by St. Paul. These issues are dramatized in the plot, but also discussed openly (too much so for some critics, who found fault with such expository lumps) by the characters, especially Father Karras and Lieutenant Kinderman.

Perhaps the deepest fear exploited by The Exorcist, running under and alongside more specific social issues, is that of death and nothingness after death. In the novel, the night that the first signs of Regan's possession manifest themselves (rapping noises that her mother hears), Chris MacNeil dreams...

The Exorcist Short Guide

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The Exorcist
The first major blockbuster in the history of horror cinema, William Friedkin&#x0027;s The Exorcist (1973) has exerted a powerful influence on the subsequent development of the genre and ...
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